Thứ Tư, 9 tháng 10, 2013

Business news and markets: as it happened - October 9, 2013


Mixed close in European markets



17.03 European markets are now closed and it has been a mixed day, with

the South outperforming the North of Europe.



In Germany the Dax closed down 0.46pc



In France the Cac closed down 0.16pc



In Spain the Ibex was up 1.29pc



In Italy the FTSE Mib was up 0.97pc.




UK markets close



16.43 Lingering worries over the US budget and debt ceiling have

ensured the FTSE 100 has lost a further 27.92 points, or 0.4pc, to

close at a three-month low of 6,337.91. Will Nicholls, a dealer at

spread-betting firm Capital Spreads, said:



d535b quotes 1817837a Investors are praying for an agreement between US politicians before next

week’s debt ceiling deadline – or they face chaotic markets in what has been

a positive year to date for global economies so far.



Janet Yellen is set to be announced as the new Fed Chairman by Barack Obama

today, but the positive effects of her dovish stance on the markets are

being over-ruled by the panic and current downward trend set by the

debt-ceiling and government shut down.




Mixed start to US earnings season



16.27 US markets have also been hit by a mixed start to earnings season

in the US.



Alcoa rallied 3.8pc after the biggest US aluminum producer unofficially kicked

off earnings season with better-than-forecast profit.



Men’s Wearhouse jumped 25pc after Jos. A. Bank Clothiers offered to acquire

the apparel retailer.



But Yum! Brands sank 8.5pc after third- quarter income fell 68pc on lower

same-store sales in China, while Costco Wholesale dropped 1.6pc after profit

missed estimates.




Wall Street waivers as it awaits official appointment of Yellen



16.18 Wall Street fluctuated between gains and losses on Wednesday as

markets awaited the official appointment of Janet Yellen as head of the US

Federal Reserve.



The SP 500 added less than 1 point to 1,655.56 after climbing

0.2pc in early trading. The Dow Jones rose 3.11 points, or less than

0.1pc to 14,779.64.



Gold has also tumbled below the $1300 on Wednesday, falling 1.6pc to

$1,2988.22, after the dollar extended gains to hit a one-week high

after it was revealed that Yellen would be the next US fed chair.



The greenback advanced 0.5pc to 97.34 yen and was up 0.5pc to $1.3512 against

the euro.



Dan Dorrow, head of research at Faros Trading, told Bloomberg:



d535b quotes 1817837a

We’ve got dollar strength against the safe havens.



Yellen’s nomination, which was widely expected, is still a risk-positive

event.




Cable says he ‘expects’ Royal Mail bosses pay to remain ‘restrained’



16.01 The business secretary admits that the pay package for the chief

executive of Royal Mail, Moya Greene, is “complicated” but says he

hopes the bosses will show “proper restraint.”



d535b quotes 1817837a

We would expect [Moya Greene] and others to exercise appropriate restraint.

But it will be a private company and we would expect them to formulate their

own remuneration policy.



And that’s it from Cable.




Independence of BNP Paribas valuation under question



15.57 The committee has pointed out that BNP Paribas, one of the groups

that helped the government set a value range for the shares, has a contract

with Royal Mail. Cable says he will check the exact arrangement, saying he

was told “categorically” it was an “independent”

valuation.




We are committed to the six-day service, says Cable



15.46 The business secretary reiterates that both the frequency of

Royal Mail’s service and the geographical spread, cannot be changed without

parliament’s approval.



d535b quotes 1817837a

The universal service obligation can’t be changed by the Royal Mail or

regulator, it will have to go to parliament.




Royal Mail unlikely to sever ties with Post Office, even after ten years,

says Cable



15.38 MPs are asking the business secretary whether he is concerned

that the Royal Mail will look to other providers, such as supermarkets,

instead of the Post Office network after the ten year agreement with the

Post Office expires.



Mr Cable says he finds those concerns “implausible”:



d535b quotes 1817837a

I find it implausible precisely because it is so much in the interest of the

Royal Mail to continue its relationship.



The Post Office has a reach that no other network has and its extremely

valuable for Royal Mail to keep it




Royal Mail brand protected under agreement with Royal Household



15.28 The business secretary confirms that there is an agreement with

Royal Hosuehold over circumstances in which the brand can be used

specifically to stop it being abused.



For example, it coudl not be used If it brought crown into disrepute or the

Royal Mail ceased to become universal service provider.




Workers do not lose shares if made redundant or leave over disability



15.25 Vince Cable has cleared up some confusion over the conditions

surrounding whether employees will lose their shares if they leave the group

before the end of the three-year lock in period. He says there is an

exception for those who leave due to redundancy or disability.




Employees who leave Royal Mail within three years must give up shares



15.23 The committee challenges Mr Cable on the fact that employees who

leave Royal Mail within the three-year lock-in period must give up their

shares. Is that fair, they ask.



d535b quotes 1817837a

That would seem unfair and I will certainly take up the issue on that probably

small number of cases of people who might find themselves disadvantaged in

that way.




No taxpayer clawback if asset sales generate unexpected windfall, says Cable



15.18 The Business Secretary is being asked whether taxpayers will

benefit should the value of Royal Mail’s buildings shoot up more than

expected, generating a windfall when they are sold. The answer is no.



d535b quotes 1817837a

I don’t think you can isolate one way of Royal Mail business in that way. It

will hopefully earn profit, through its trading business and asset

transactions. These assets are available for sale and that’s taken into

account in the valuation of the company.



It is an overall part of the same package that is part of the price people

will be paying for the company




Fed’s Evans says US monetary policy must remain accommodative



15.10 Sayonara, taper? Over in the US, the Federal Reserve’s Evans has

said the central bank should keem monetary policy loose saying economic

growth has been “not nearly strong enough”




British economy grew 0.8pc in three months to September, says NIESR



15.04 The pace of British economic expansion slowed slightly from the

three months to August, when GDP grew 0.9pc, according to the National

Institute of Economic and Social Research.



It added that it expects the UK to pass its pre-crisis peak until 2015, with

the economy still 2.5pc below the size it was in early 2008.




Panmure Gordon is an ‘outlier’ on Royal Mail valuation, says Cable



14.56 MPs bring up the Panmure Gordon note which made headlines last

week by suggesting that the government has undervalued Royal Mail by at

least £1bn
.



d535b quotes 1817837a

There are a lot of equity analysts out there. This is one and its an outlier.

I’m not criticising them. In the banking crisis they were very good. But on

this particular occassion they are way outside consensus.




Ministers criticise 440-page prospectus document



14.50 The committee has repeatedly asked Mr Cable whether he think the

production of a 440 page prospectus just 12 days before closing the share

offering is unfair to individual investors, who may have bought shares

without understanding their investment.



Cable insists that he has full faith in retail investors to know that they are

taking a risk and that they will have made a judicious decision.




Royal Mail share offering attracted 700,000 individual applications from

retail investors



14.43 Vince Cable says the high number of

applicants reassures him that the £750 minimum spend did not put off too

many people.




Cable: We valued Royal Mail based on comparable situations



14.40 The business secretary says the value range was determined by

comparing Royal Mail with its peers in other European countries such as

Belgium and Austria.



Cable: NAO will decide whether float has been value for money



d535b quotes 1817837a

There are the proceeds both now and in the future and we also have to think

about whether this transaction has helped deliever our basic objective – to

enable Royal Mail to deliver universal service obligation



Cable: Royal mail share offering has a long view



14.33 Business secretary Vince Cable denies he is being inconsistent by

supporting the Royal Mail float, having criticized other privatisations

while in opposition.



d535b quotes 1817837a There’s quite a lot of connection between what I’m saying to you about this

flotation and what I said before about the Kay reports and long termism



A major objective is to try to obtain a long term secure responsible

institutional investor base – that’s primarily what this is about .



This is about long-term stable secure investment. As far as the fees are

concerned they are rather competitive unlike other privatisations



IMF director: ‘I cannot think of anybody better than Yellen to lead the Fed’



14.27 Here’s Jose Vinals, financial counsellor and director of money

and capital markets at the IMF:



d535b quotes 1817837a I would not like to pre-judge the annuoncement that the white house is

going to make. But on a personal note if this afternoon Janet Yellen is

nomiated as chairman, I would be very happy, and this is because over the

years I have been present with her in a number of meetings and I have the

highest reg for her both as a very solid excellent thinker



Given her very substantial academic experience and background and also as a

very solid policymaker with a tremendous good sense of policy both on

academic credentials and policy credit, I cannot think of anybody who is

better than Janet Yellen to lead the fed in these challenging times




Here’s what the IMF thinks might happen if the Fed tapers too suddenly




14.23 In its global financial stability report, the IMF lays out two

scenarios. The baseline scenario (green line) assumes that the Fed

exits quantitative easing in line with its current guidance
- i.e.

gradually. The adverse scenario (red line) predicts what would happen

to Treasury yields should the Fed taper more sharply. The blue dot shows

what happened to Treasury yields when Ben Bernanke announced that a taper

was on the cards – it raised yields but they remained below the long-term

average.




IMF warns that US Fed must taper with care



14.00 The International Monetary Fund has cautioned that if the US

Federal Reserve does not execute tapering in the right way, long term

borrowing costs could rocket, which could wipe as much as $2.3 trillion off

the bond market.




MS autumn/winter range on analysts’ minds



13.30 Marks Spencer‘s new clothing range has been a topic of much

discussion among analysts this week, with a number of retail experts cutting

their forecasts for the company in the belief the company’s new

autumn/winter fashion will not be a big hit. Nomura has weighed in on

the debate today and said that the “success or otherwise of

autumn/winter seems too early to call”. Looking broadly at the group’s

second quarter, they said:



d535b quotes 1817837a There is no doubt that MS’s trading stance in general merchandise

through the summer months has been more promotional than we would have

liked. We indicated in our note dated 9 July that we held ‘our

above-consensus FY estimates unchanged, although we acknowledge MS

needs better trade than we have seen to date to deliver our estimates’



We believe the early start to the summer sale in June prior to the heat

wave may have been unhelpful in terms of generating full price sales in 2Q,

while the industry in general faced with promotional comparatives and warm temperatures

has struggled at the end of September.



After falling on Monday and Tuesday, MS shares have edged up 0.7pc.




The curious case of the fall in gold



13.14 The failure of gold to rally in response to news that the status

quo is likely to continue at the US Federal Reserve (loose money, low

interest rates), has prompted one analyst to brand the market in the yellow

metal “broken”. Andrew Thrasher, investment analyst at

Financial Enhancement Group, said:



d535b quotes 1817837a

When it’s unable to rally on good news, you have to take notice.





Gold price over the last three days. Source: Bloomberg



Royal Mail investors still buying in grey market after deadline



12.39 Louise Armitstead reports.



Small investors are still scrambling to get exposure to Royal Mail by

buying in the grey market after the share order books for the historic

privatisation closed at midnight.



Spreadbetting firm IG Index said demand for Royal Mail in the grey market

was “just as strong” today as the record demand yesterday with investors

betting that the shares will open far higher than the Government’s

estimates.



Alastair McCaig, market analyst at IG Index, said some investors were

selling positions and taking profits. But the majority are still buyers.



“We’re seeing a split of about 60pc buyers and 40pc sellers. The sellers

are straight profit takers rather than short-sellers. There’s still a huge

interest in this IPO and we expect it to continue until the unconditional

trading starts on Tuesday,” he said.



The mid-price in the grey market is 397p on Wednesay, down marginally from

Tuesday but still 67p higher than the top of the Government’s range of 300p

to 330p.



Full piece here.




Confused about Help to Buy? Ask our experts



12.35 Our personal finance editor Richard Dyson is answering

readers’ questions on the Chancellor’s flagship scheme
to help

first-time buyers get on the housing ladder. The webchat has just kicked off

– join in here.




A Fed under Yellen will be ‘looser for longer’



12.27 Ambrose Evans-Pritchard looks

at Janet Yellen’s policy preferences
and concludes that, above all

else, she is concerned the real level of unemployment – not just the

headline figure which masks the number of people who have stopped trying to

look for a job.



So there we have it. The next chairman of the Fed is going to track the

labour participation rate. Money will stay loose. Markets have been spared

again. The Brics can breathe easier.



This leaves me deeply uneasy. We are surely past the point where we can

keep using QE to pump up asset prices. My view is that emergency stimulus

should henceforth be deployed only to inject money directly into the veins

of the economy as an adjunct to the US Treasury, by fiscal dominance, as

deemed necessary.



That would take an intellectual revolution. Is Janet Yellen game for such

incendiary ideas?



Perhaps.




Read his whole piece here.




Lloyds shares rise on Help to Buy hope



11.33 Back in the FTSE 100, Lloyds Banking Group shares are up

1.9pc after influential analyst Ian Gordon, of Investec, highlighted

that Britain’s biggest mortgage lender will receive a boost from the second

round of Help to Buy. He says:



d535b quotes 1817837a As detail of (phase 2) of the “Help to Buy” scheme emerges, we see the

banks, in particular Lloyds, as the key beneficiaries. We see little

pressure on front-book pricing, but the key benefit (for banks) is that

“interest rate prisoners” are set to remain “trapped”. Cause for Lloyds to

celebrate?




OECD forecast signals developed economies headed for upturn



11.27 Things are looking up for the 33 developed economies covered by

the OECD. The organisation’s leading indicator, which is meant to provide an

early signal of turning points in economic activity, rose to 100.6 in August

from 100.5 in July – where the long-term average is 100.




Blow for Canada as Disney Pixar closes studio



11.14 The only Disney Pixar studio outside California is to

close down, reports Canadian news website The

Province
. The studio, which employed 100 in Vancouver, Canada,

produced short films based well-known Pixar characters such as Woody and

Buzz Lightyear from the Toy Story films.




UK entrepreneurs confident about their own growth prospects



10.55 Deloitte has declared that UK businesses are “ready to

invest”
after finding that 82pc of the entrepreneurs it surveyed

said they expected to grow by at least 10pc this year
.



Read their full report here.




Vendata falls despite reporting record oil and gas production



10.38 Mining and oil giant Vedanta Resources has slumped to the

bottom of the FTSE 100 after issuing a production update. Vedanta,

which is controlled by Indian billionaire Anil Agarwal, said that zinc, oil

and gas production increased during the second quarter, but its shares still

fell 4.8pc today. There appear to be no positive surprises in the update,

with Liberum Capital analyst Ben Davis saying that it is “largely

inline with consensus expectations”. A rating downgrade by Morgan

Stanley won’t have helped.




Are SMEs finally starting to borrow?



10.22 Demand for lending from small and medium-sized businesses picked

up in the three months to September, according to the Bank

of England’s quarterly credit conditions survey
.This has

prompted banks to expect credit demand to increase in the run-up to

Christmas.



d535b quotes 1817837a Lenders reported that capital investment and commercial real estate

activity were both significant positive factors affecting overall credit

demand, with the largest rises reported since the survey began in 2007. But

lenders also cited a number of factors which continued to weigh on corporate

credit demand. Despite the reported pickup in Q3, some lenders noted that

investment remained at a low level.




Pound slips around half a cent against dollar



10.18 The pound took a tumble to a two-week low after the surprisingly

downbeat industrial production figures.




Source: Bloomberg




Fall in industrial production – just a blip?



09.51 Economists aremixed over whether this morning’s

industrial production data are a reliable signal of the wider economic

picture.



Philip Shaw at Investec has put the surprise fall in output from

Britain’s factories, utilities and mines as mere “data volatility”.



d535b quotes 1817837a

This months data suggests the manufacturing sector was not roaring away at

quite the pace the earlier data suggested. We view it as data volatility and

remain relatively relaxed about the outlook for industrial production and

the UK recovery as a whole.



Meanwhile Ross Walker at RBS thinks the figures balance out the

very upbeat picture coming out of other surveys such as the purchasing

managers’ surveys (PMIs):



d535b quotes 1817837a They’re surprisingly bad, hugely at odds with the surveys which I think are

equally dubious – I don’t think we’re expanding at anything like the pace

the PMIs tell us – and way below forecasts.



It does take some of the gloss off the UK, I think some of the expectations

were getting a bit ahead of reality about how well the UK was doing. So this

will prompt people to have a bit of a re-think about the underlying pace of

expansion.



It’s not going to derail third quarter growth, we should still see GDP

expanding by about 0.8pc int he quarter. But the sort of hyperbole and

people talking a week ago after the PMIs about 1.2pc quarter on quarter, I

think that’s looking way off sight.




Risers and fallers in industrial production



09.49 Manufacturing of machinery, pharmaceuticals and basic metals were

the key components dragging industrial production down. But the UK’s vehicle

makers are in rude health, with the manufacture of transport equipment

rising 12.5pc.




Source: ONS







Shock fall in Britain’s industrial output



09.42 Activity out of the UK’s factories, utilities and mines

registered a sharp drop in August, largely due to falling output from

manufacturers
, according to latest figures from the Office for National

Statistics.



Industrial production fell 1.1pc in August, its steepest fall in nearly

a year. Economists had expected industrial production to rise 0.4pc. The

year-on-year drop was 1.5pc.





Yellen nomination a lone bright spot for markets



09.29 With the FTSE 100 off 0.3pc in morning trade, Rebecca

O’Keeffe
, head of investment at broker Interactive Investor, says:



d535b quotes 1817837a President Obama has opened the door to talks with Republicans, which many

hope will end the current gridlock. We are however still in a significant

danger zone, with negotiations likely to be protracted and painful. With the

IMF also more bearish on global growth, there is little good news to entice

investors, however markets may take some comfort from the imminent

nomination of Janet Yellen as the next Chairperson of the Federal Reserve.

Her appointment, if confirmed, should result in the status quo being

maintained.




Janet Yellen – a life in central banks and universities



09.20 The Wall Street Journal has published a timeline

of Janet Yellen’s career
, from her days at Brown and Yale

Universities to her presidency of the San Francisco Federal Reserve and her

current role as second-in-command to Ben Bernanke in Washington. She’s even

had a stint in the UK as lecturer at the London School of Economics

between
1978 and 1980.




Goldman bullish on housebuilders



09.02 Goldman Sachs has driven a number of property-related shares

higher this morning. Housebuilder Taylor Wimpey has been named by

analysts at the influential broker as a “conviction buy”, sending

the shares up 3pc. Barratt Developments, Bovis Homes, and Crest

Nicholson
have been rated “buy” at Goldman too, and have all

gained 2pc as a result.




08.41 Yellen a “thumbs-up” for markets



Reuters has pulled together together the reaction

to news that Janet Yellen is to be nominated as chairman the US Federal

Reserve
. Her appointment has been widely greeted for the

continuity it provides
– Yelen was among the architects of the Fed’s

current strategy and is seen as a talented, experienced and safe pair of

hands.



Sean Callow at Westpac in Australia, provided an apt summary of the wider

reaction:



d535b quotes 1817837a

Markets are giving Yellen the thumbs up, counting on QE being maintained at

full pace until further notice. It’s a notable reaction given Yellen’s

nomination was so widely expected and that it comes at a time markets are

already assuming the FOMC will not seriously consider a policy change at the

October meeting given the fiscal standoff.



Still, many note that she is powerless in the face of the US Congressional

stand-off. David R. Kotok, chairman of Cumberland advisors, says all

Yellen can do is “proceed slowly on any tapering policy”.



And Annette Beacher of TD Securities in Singapore, reckons a

Yellen appointment could delay tapering until as late as March.




FTSE slips in early trade



08.17 There’s no change in direction for the FTSE 100. London’s

benchmark index slipped a further 24 points, or 0.4pc, to 6,341 in early

trade, following yesterday’s 1.1pc drop, as investors remain nervous about

the US budget impasse and debt ceiling. Even the expected appointment of

policy dove Janet Yellen as Fed chief has failed to lift the index this

morning.




Mexico joins chorus urging US debt ceiling deal



08.12 Overnight, Mexico became the latest country to urge the two

houses of Congress to overcome their differences to reach a deal on raising

the debt ceiling
. The US is the destination for around 80pc of Mexican

exports. Speaking on Mexican radio, the country’s finance minister Luis

Videgaray said:



d535b quotes 1817837a

[This] has the potential to enormously affect financial markets and therefore

not just the US economy but also the economies of the rest of the world.



It’s an event that could be so serious that I think we all trust that the

lawmakers and the executive of the US will findt he means to reach an

agreement.




Greggs like-for-like sales dip



08.05 Greggs meanwhile has reported another drop in

like-for-like sales
– down 0.5pc in the past quarter. It’s an

improvement on the 3.2pc drop that triggered a profit warning earlier this

year but is still a challenge for the new boss Roger Whiteside. Total

sales at Greggs rose 3.6pc and Mr Whiteside says he is making “good

progress.”




Co-operative bank axes four board members



08.00 As Louise Armitstead reports in the morning City Briefing

email, it’s been “the night of the long knives” at the

Co-operative Bank, which today has announced the culling of four board

directors.



Duncan Bowdler, Peter Harvey, Bob Newton and Len Wardle will all stand down

immediately to “increase the independence of the bank” ahead of

the drastic recapitalisation programme announced in June. The board, which

is left with just nine members, says it’s looking to appoint four more

directors in due course.




Markets still cautious amid US Congress row



07.56 Voices across the financial world have greeted the nomination of

Janet Yellen for the top job at the US Federal Reserve, but it could be

tricky to see the reaction manifest itself in the markets today. As Michael

van Dulken
at Accendo Markets, notes:



d535b quotes 1817837a

News that Obama is set to nominate the dovish vice Chair Janet Yellen to the

top job at the Fed (and in global central banking) has seen sentiment

improve, on prospect of policy continuity – rates staying low for long and

policy accommodative – but US political gridlock still dominant as well as

the IMF cutting global growth forecasts and warning the US.




07.23 Nomination of ‘battle-tested’ Yellen relieves

markets



Markets have reacted with relief to news that Janet Yellen, deputy

chairman at the US Federal Reserve, is to be nominated for the top job by

Barack Obama later today. Her nomination removes one of the many unknowns

that have weighed on trading in recent days
, offering some breathing

space amid the uncertainty surrounding the US budget impasse.



Here’s Andrew Sullivan, director of Asian sales trading at Kim Eng

Securities
:



d535b quotes 1817837a

I think it’s more politics than reality, but it’s slightly positive for

investor sentiment, certainly.



Yellen is very much in the same camp as Bernanke, so we’re not going to see

any major policy change. That’s the relief to the market.



A former colleague of Janet Yellen, Randy Krosner, has just been on

Radio Four’s Today programme. He describes the Fed chairman nominee, who led

the San Francisco branch of the US central bank during the worst of the

financial crisis, as “battle-tested”, and without using the

label, confirms her dovish stance.



d535b quotes 1817837a

She cares a lot about making sure the economy gets back on track. She doesn’t

see a lot of inflation pressure in the short or intermediate run. She would

try to do everythign possible to get the economy growing again given

inflation pressures aren’t there.



Krosner, who sat on the board of the US Federal Reserve between 2006 and 2009,

added that since Yellen was one of the “architects” of the central

bank’s current approach – using massive asset purchases and low interest

rates to stimulate the economy – her appointment is unlikely to trigger “dramatic

change” at the bank
.




Taken together, Janet Yellen has more ‘hours’ in monetary policy than

any Fed chief in history Photo: AP



Best of the rest



07.10 Drones, the unmanned planes used in military operations in

Afghanistan, could

face difficulties taking off in the civilian market due to privacy concerns
,

according to the Financial Times.



A shale

gas boom in the UK could create more than 100,000 jobs
, according to

consultancy Poyry, in the most bullish estimate yet of the potential

economic benefits of fracking, says The Times.



The Guardian reports that the trial

of five former employees of imprisoned Ponzi-schemer Bernard Madoff kicked

off on Tuesday with the selection of the jury
.



Morrisons is jumping on the bandwagon by opening

its stores on Boxing Day and New Yea’s Day for the first time in its history
,

making it the last of the Big Four Supermarkets to do so, reports the Independent.




Our top stories this morning



07.05 Top news on the Telegraph finance page this morning is that US

President Barack Obama is to nominate Janet Yellen as chairman of the

country’s central bank
, making her the Federal Reserve’s first

female head.



Katherine Rushton reports that America’s

stock markets tumbled yesterday after President Obama said “there are

no magic bullets” to solve the political stand-off that has forced the

country’s government to shut dow
n and now threatens a US

default.



Jeremy Warner writes that the International

Monetary Fund’s Olivier Blanchard owes George Osborne an apology
,

but is unlikely to give one.




Olivier Blanchard has performed an embarrassing about-turn on a

warning deilvered to George Osborne earlier this year that the Chancellor

was “playing with fire” with austerity. Photo: Getty



Good morning



07.00 Good morning and welcome to our daily business and markets live

blog, your one stop shop for all the breaking business stories of the day.



Business news and markets: as it happened - October 9, 2013

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